2012-10-01
2012-10-31
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FOXNEWSW 400
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libya 1964
paul ryan 1842
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benghazi 1582
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okay. good night. john: politics, do they lie or advocates just spin? >> i like to work with people who provide services to me. john: this season, it's beyond true serious about confnting political propaganda 6789 that's our show tonight. ♪ >>> and now, john stossel. [applause] john: i cld never run for political office because i don't keep my mouth shut. i offend people all the time and what i mean to say does not come out right. during a mock presidential debate, i said "college is stupid for some people." it is. producers turnedded that into an attack it'd. >> he says college is stupid, stossel, bad for our kids. john: what do candidates say when things are spunadly? my colleague, andrea tantaros, has answers. she used to be press secretary for the republican leadership in the house so you worked for boehner an company, and you then lied to us in the press about stuff? >> i never lied. it was actually hasser and company and tom delay. the goal of press secretary is to be as honest as possible, but you can never lie to the media. it's a cardinal rule. john: i assumed you always

fox news sunday. >> john: winning the presidency, what does it take? a strong debate? >> it's the theater of politics and trying to get people come into the theater and see if they like it. >> you have to see the campaigns in the lens of the camera. >> campaigns are made of moments that everybody remembers. >> the difference between a hockey mom and pig, lipstick. >> and they would like to forget. >> education and what is the third one there? >> john: we take you behind the scenes. we'll show you what they don't like to talk about. >> the lying is okay in politics? winning the presidency. ♪ ♪ >> john: when it comes to winning the presidency, i'd like to think that the choice is about whose ideas are better but when you talk to people behind the scenes they talk about moments. >> there are a series of moments and that's what matters. >> john: remember the scream? howard dean led john kerry in early polls but then he tried to rally the troops. >> we're going to california, texas and new york. >> john: people in the room sounded like a normal rally, but because dean's micro

to last. >> it's built to last. >> john: nicole says she doesn't mind hearing the same speech. >> it makes it that much easier to pinpoint when there is something new. >> whole pacperks up. >> you see us furiously typing. >> john: sometimes campaigns play with reporters, use us for their purposes. >> you get a joy in fooling the media? >> yes, but more importantly you wanted to have your own narrative at your own time. >> my running mate, dick cheney. >> before bush made this announcement, rove wanted to mislead the media. >> we had a a guy on the campaign who was leaker. he said what is going on? i said look, big secret, don't tell anybody but burn has decided to go with jack of missouri. >> john: media ran with the false story. >> i was the guy that was going to go leak. >> john: lying to the guy? >> yes. >> what it does it helps tell a story, you want it told by an evening anchor or a candidate that expresses why he made this choice. >> john: four years later the "new york post" says john kerry had picked richard gephardt to to be his running mate but, of course, he picked

knew. john till then has steadied the illinois teachers' union. i assume they are up to speed? >> it is a great irony of the again ceiling. people don't like that if the teacher is below par. but parents want to identify those teachers who are exceptional to be rewarded with merit pay. they want everybody -- everybody to be treated the same. >> they are spending 13,000 per student inchicago. >> exceptional teachers ake those four kids would be greatly rewarded. but with the strike we just had they were fighting for the lack of accountability. they don't want to be held accountable. there was no apparent present at the negotiating table. john: most parents want to do the right thing. the average wage is 40,000 chicago teachers? >> 71,000 according to the union anthe school district says 76,009 including pension closer at 90% which is more than our tax -- architects or nurses. >> we have the shortest school day and a few lt ness met minutes. >> they say they are overworked. >> a child k-12 will get about three years less destruction that is why the teachers who are so ell paid p

see you back here on monday for. and, of course, "the willis report" is coming up next. john: if we have as much they're would be almost and poverty. john: after the welfare state. that's our show tonight. ♪ john: american is a rich country. it seems wrong then when there's so much wealth around some americans have -- are so poor. this weekend. cholera requires is taking a little more money from rich people and putting in the programs like welfare and job training. i believe i was in college and. the students are today. my professors tell me that the experts in washington have found the solution to poverty. i believe but then i became a reporter. i watched the of what our rework not work. i watched as it created a poverty industry, lots of victims and bureaucrats who specialize in sucking money out of washington d.c. to give to them and to themselves. over the years most poor people state court. they are still poor. how can that be when we spend so much on poverty programs. >> we will spend $1 trillion. over the next decade. the top trend -- top 10 trillion. john: many othe

[ ♪ theme ♪ ] [ ♪ theme ♪ ] >> john: good morning. this is the "bill press show." i'm john fuglesang filling in for bill with you until 9:00 a.m. eastern time. it is a pleasure to be here in bill's seat. he will be back tomorrow. for today, there's so much to talk about from last night's debate between scott walker and elizabeth -- scott brown and elizabeth warren. it is a little early. and the winner has already pronounced to be david gregory. mitt romney's trash collector is talking. paul ryan has a hard time doing his math homework and best of all, a man with a doubly phallic name has endorsed governor romney. first, here's lisa. >> good morning everyone. it's not about whether you win or lose. it's how you play the game unless you're running for president then it is about winning but not according to mitt romney. in his version of reality where the polls are made up and the results don't matter he says the debates are about something bigger than winning. they're a chance for each candidate to p

tonight. john: such a nasty word people say it caused by our financial problem. a lot of people in business are greedy but aren't you? at abc a documentary on greed showing how it can be self-destructive. >> to test people's greed they put dollar bills in a ballpark you can get as many for yourself but every 10 seconds if there is money left he will double it. john: the game ends if they empty the bowl. what happens? >> they could have made more money if they left half of the bills but they did not work that out. >> sally kohn is a liberal blocker writing about that attitude. >> i don't think greed is bad but what values do we hold alongside as a country? as a society? to balance out those impulses for the better good of everyone? john: an economist from george mason university thinks the government should but out except in foreseeing rule of law. >> property rights constrain self-interest. i don't like to 17. we are more self interested ourselves, our family, not about strangers. every economy will be based on self-interest. with greed people grabbing more than they deserve. jo

. john: tonight weir at the and old trial liberal campus university of north carolina at chapel hill. the word freshman is disparaged it is sexist. and the code says explicitly implicitly asking for sex is against the code. what does that say against three mind and three people? to night. john: this week we have come to one of the most prestigious universities in america, university of maryland -- north carolina i debated former vermont governor about the role of government. i hope i convince them but i don't know. when everything it is important we have an open debate. and traditionally that is what universities were supposed to be about. open debate. but college campuses often are not. two reasons. some have speech codes of what you cannot say. some are so liberal libertarians and conservatives are ostracized if they speak up. you had a student here? >> 2010. and robert studies free-speech and is with fire the foundation for individual rights and education. hadley, you were not very political. what happened? >> i have opinions but struggled what i believe, when to speak up, and whe

[ ♪ theme ♪ ] >> john: good morning. this is the "bill press show." i'm john fuglesang filling in for bill live from our nation's capital. we thank you for joining us this morning on your radio on your computer or on current tv. it is a very big day. we'll be taking your calls all morning at 1-866-55-press. tonight, of course is the second presidential debate. we want to know what you think barack obama can do to turn this thing around. also, there's some controversy about candy crawley moderating. the american family association thinks that discouraging homophobia is unchristian. hillary clinton shocks republicans by taking responsibility for something -- something no republican did after 9-11. to make sense of all of this right now, we head over to the deep underground bunker and lisa ferguson in the current news center. good morning. >> hey john, good morning everyone. it is round two of the presidential debates tonight and president obama is under a lot of pressure. if the polls mean anything which

but when fox news just like -- it doesn't exist. it really tells you what -- >> john: the democrats are going to try to use this as a wedge issue while the republicans try to use benghazi as their wedge issue. i suspect both topics may go away as of november 7th. >> hopefully not. i think that the president did a fantastic job last night on jay leno saying that he basically said that male politicians should not be making decisions for women. that's what a lot of women feel. >> john: such a pleasure to have you both here. does colin powell's endorsement mean anything? >> not as much as it did in 2008. he used to be the war hero when he was with bush. now he endorses obama. it is all colin powell. >> i think if he endorsed romney, that would be a big irstory -- bigger story. >> john: i think you're right. tina depue and eric boehlert, two of the smartest people i know. thank you both so much for your time tonight. a programming note, governor eliot spitzer will be back tomorrow live from l.a. where he's also appea

speech of the democratic convention bar none. john fugelsang who's satiric commentary leaves us laughing every night. and you're going to explain how we use social media tonight. >> john: indeed. and we're here debating from my hometown, the great isle of long. current tv is where we want you to be on tv with us. if you look right below, you'll see our brand new and improved twitter screen. throughout the debate you will be able to watch not just the candidates but the feedback of your fellow americans, different media outlets, all of the shows here on current, including cenk who is with his brand new baby on the west coast. and if you want to hear what people are heckling to the candidates throughout the entire evening. this is the place to be. if you include the hashtag in your tweet, you will see your tweet come up on the screen so try to have an attractive profile picture tonight. the steaks are high. so you can be part of this great electronic family. >> jennifer: i want to start our conversation by asking you guys a question. does barack obama go after

young turks." >> john: good evening. i'm john fuglesang sitting in for governor eliot spitzer and this is "viewpoint." coming you on the show tonight and this is not an oxymoron, mormon feminists for obama. i think you're going to like them. but first, the romney campaign insists that it has what it takes to win the white house this year. not money. it's got lots and lots of that. no, they've got momentum. they say it began when the polls started creeping in romney's direction after president obama auditioned for an ambien commercial during the first debate. bill bennett of all credible sources has joined the romney surrogates claiming that mitt romney now carries the momentum into the homestretch. that was bush's education czar. the romney campaign even put out a web video titled momentum. three minutes plus it intercuts lots of patriotic scenes with lots of shots of smiling mitt and his pal paul ryan. two guys totally opposed to gay marriage who look like they're about to announce one anticipating that a tid

the nobel prize in physiology of medicine. japan's shinya yamanaka shares the honor with britain's john b. gurdon. both discovered specialized cells that make up the body. >> the nobel assembly has today decided to award the nobel prize in physiology or medicine 2012 jointly to john b. gurdon and shinya yamanaka. >> the nobel assembly in stockholm, sweden, made the announcement monday. yamanaka is 50 years old. he's a professor at kyoto university. he established the method to produce a new type of cells called induced pluripotent stem cells, or isp. they're capable of becoming specialized cells which can be used to create tissue for neurons and heart muscle. john b. gurdon was the first one to discover that it might contain all the information found in an organism in 1962. 40 years later, yamanaka confirmed and expanded on gurdon's thesis. professor yamanaka spoke about his nobel prize win at kyoto university. >> translator: i am very happy about receiving this prize. but at the same time, i feel a great sense of responsibility. ips is a new technology, and it has a lot of potential in t

campaign in modern history -- >> john: and that hasn't changed -- >> eliot: it has changed. john don't defy the polls and everybody in the public is saying our president performed horrendously. mitt romney has turned this around and that's why i'm saying joe biden needs to score a win tonight. >> john: i spent last week in madison, wisconsin, and i was surprised at how many signs i saw saying reelect, paul ryan all over the place. we'll be right back. don't go away. yourself. with governors granholm, spitzer, and vice president gore, watch the only truly experienced presidential debate coverage. >> cenk: back on current's coverage of the vice presidential debate. it is in kentucky tonight. paul ryan versus vice president joe biden. i'm here with governor eliot spitzer, governor grandholm from "the war room," john fugelsang, and i want to talk about strategy now. governor grandholm you were talking about finding daylight between the vice presidential and presidential side of the ticket. on the republican side we have plenty of opportunity to do that because ryan i

connection to serial killer john dougal. >> john was an evil evil man. >>reporter: district attorney steve gave the i team access to the case file. i spent a week combing 12 boxes of evidence police reports court transcripts audio and videotapes. in the town of belmont the disappearance of 15-year-old john davis and stabbing death of 12-year-old lance turner went unsolved for years. as did the murder of 12-year-old shawn dan in sacramento. then the john went to the men colony in san luis obispo on burglary charge. got into a sexual relationship with a cell mate and finally confessed to him about killing those 3 boys. we found a recording of the cell mate charles wright reporting john doug el to authorities. >> take whatever necessary to get this guy what was your reason for giving this information. >> i can't stand a child can i recall. >>reporter: he wanted a deal on his own charges so he convinced john doug el to write details of the murder. draw map to the crime scene and tell authorities everything. >> stab him where? tl. >>reporter: here's the intraeinging part. documents sh

war room," and comedian and political commentator, john fugelsang. we are here covering the debate. you'll see the stage in denver there. you see all of their supporters and friends and the folks who are gathered in the denver area for this debate. milling around waiting for the event to start. here on current, we're going to do something different from what the other networks are doing. we're in a new era now. i'm going to ask cenk uygur to tell you how social media plays into our coverage and the difference it makes in politics in this day and time. >> cenk: absolutely. i'm really looking forward to this debate. you are going to see all of the tweets and get instant fact checking from both sides. in the old school they would spin it right after the debate. all you have to do is stay right here and you will see both sides putting things out there in the middle of the debate. so it will be really interesting to watch it right here on current. and we have michael shure in the war room in san francisco, and he'll break down some of the electoral possibilities, which

john avalos, the chair. i'm joined by christina olague, the vice chair and supervisor eric mar. the clerk is dean na braley. our staff at sfgtv, who are helping broadcast are jesse lar son and nona millconian. madam clerk. >> please make sure to silence all cell phones and devices. completed cards to be included as part of the file should be submitted to the clerk. items acted upon today will appear on the october 16th board of supervisors agenda unless otherwise stated. >> thank you. could you please call our one item. >> a hearing regarding theft scams targeting older asian women. >> thank you. this is an item that has been sponsored by supervisor eric mar. supervisor mar, the floor is yours. >> thank you, chair avalos. thank you for coming, everyone, this morning. the past few months we have been hearing, especially in the chinese media of these types of theft scams targeting chinese elderly. they have made me very angry. not just because it is

and we need reform to that end. john mccain, thankfully, has been one representing reform could two years ago, john mccain was the one who pushed so hard for the fannie mae and freddie mac reform measures. they did not want to listen to him and would not go to the reform needed then, think that the alarm has been heard and there will be greater oversight thanks to john mccain's bipartisan efforts. even suspended his own campaign to make sure that he was putting politics aside and putting the country first. >> and senator biden, how, as vice-president, would you work to do with the polarization in washington? >> that is what i have done my whole career. dealing with violence against women and putting more police officers on the street to try to get something done about the genocide and what is going on in bosnia, i have been able to reach across the aisle. but it is fair to say that i have almost as many friends in the republican side of the aisle as i do in the democratic side of the aisle. until two weeks ago, it was two months ago that john mccain said that the fundamental view of the e

john wayne movies weren't realistic as much, but they're very patriotic and they give you a sense of, "hey, you know, i want to go do that." (music playing) i'd come out of theater having seen some of these old films, movies like "pork chop hill" and "to hell and back" with audie murphy, "sands of iwo jima" with john wayne, i'd come out having -- feeling a peculiar thing. the peculiar thing was i wanted to play war. (tim o'brien) and i remember being with my little buddies, we'd go out to the golf course and pretend we were john wayne. (patriotic music playing) when you've got john wayne, you've already got history right there in front of you embodied in one character. he carries himself as a walking convention. (gene michaud) he's the older, wiser enlisted. he has to train young recruits and he has to be the father. if it's in the line of duty, i'll do what you tell me to do. but as far as my personal life, keep your hands off. that's the same thing your father would tell you. and i wouldn't have listened to him either. that's right. you never did. how do you know? he told me. wayne

? what makes you angriest at john mccain, the republicans, what's being said about your husband that you want to shout from the mountaintops is not true? >> it was one of the most moving moments in my life, to come across that bridge with this group of kids i've never met before, but we were all together. and that's the sense you get here, we're at the parade route where the president's going to review the parade. this sense of family, of the country coming together, that's what people are looking for, i think. >> al, i'd love to tell you that i have no idea what you're talking about, that everybody here kept their emotions thoroughly in check during the ceremony, but i'd be lying to you, my friend. i'm hoping to find you in a reflective mood on a cloudy day. we're the first to speak to you coming off your summer vacation. how does it recharge you, what do you think about, what do you see, what do you read about? how are you thinking about your job these days? ♪ >> all right. there you have i, our four finalists. now, ladies and gentlemen, you're going to vote with everything at your d

at wiscsin, scott had to go up against the reca to get collective bargaining with the unions, and, john sich, the same in ohio and, he has gone out and had about 18 tax cut plans, he's straightened out the tax code in ohi and the are the types of things either presidential cante needs to implement, going forward. to start creating jobs again. >> susan, john makes a good int, fighting unions and collective bargaining, going up against regulations. thosare all things that seem toe working on the state level. should the candidates be looking at this? >> you know, on the regulatory front i do agree with john but, e notion that tax rates are the panacea and theolic magic wand is completely false. you look at iowa, for instance they had a1% -- highest corporate tax rate of any state in the country and the lowest unemployment rates, 5. % and nevada almost the lowest tax burd on a personal and corporate level, almost the highest unemployment rate. tax rates are not the panacea, the governor romney and a lot of reblicans pretend they are, but i think the business climate is an important issue d takes

to ignore one significant lead. possible connection to serial killer john dougal. >> john was an evil evil man. >>reporter: district attorney steve gave the i team access to the case file. i spent a week combing 12 boxes of evidence police reports court transcripts audio and videotapes. in the town of belmont the disappearance of 15-year-old john davis and stabbing death of 12-year-old lance turner went unsolved for years. as did the murder of 12-year-old shawn dan in sacramento. then the john went to the men colony in san luis obispo on burglary charge. got into a sexual relationship with a cell mate and finally confessed to him about killing those 3 boys. we found a recording of the cell mate charles wright reporting john doug el to authorities. >> take whatever necessary to get this guy what was your reason for giving this information. >> i can't stand a child can i recall. >>reporter: he wanted a deal on his own charges so he convinced john doug el to write details of the murder. draw map to the crime scene and tell authorities everything. >> stab him where? tl. >>reporter: h

lead. possible connection to serial killer john dougal. >> john was an evil evil man. >>reporter: district attorney steve gave the i team access to the case file. i spent a week combing 12 boxes of evidence police reports court transcripts audio and videotapes. in the town of belmont the disappearance of 15-year-old john davis and stabbing death of 12-year-old lance turner went unsolved for years. as did the murder of 12-year-old shawn dan in sacramento. then the john went to the men colony in san luis obispo on burglary charge. got into a sexual relationship with a cell mate and finally confessed to him about killing those 3 boys. we found a recording of the cell mate charles wright reporting john doug el to authorities. >> take whatever necessary to get this guy what was your reason for giving this information. >> i can't stand a child can i recall. >>reporter: he wanted a deal on his own charges so he convinced john doug el to write details of the murder. draw map to the crime scene and tell authorities everything. >> stab him where? tl. >>reporter: here's the intrae

-lehrer news hour" and "frontline." my colleagues on the panel are -- john margolis of "the chicago tribune," tom brokaw of nbc news, and brit hume of abc news. the importance of tonight's debate is underscored by two facts. both george bush and michael dukakis said their selections of a running mate would reveal a lot about themselves. and based on the history since world war ii, there is almost a 50-50 chance that one of the two men here tonight will become president of the united states. the candidates are senator dan quayle, the republican nominee, and senator lloyd bentsen, the democratic nominee. [applause] >> for the next 90 minutes we will be questioning the candidates following a format designed and agreed to by representatives of the two campaigns. however, there are no restrictions on the questions that my colleagues and i may ask this evening. by prior agreement between the two candidates, the first question goes to senator quayle, and you have two minutes to respond. senator, you have been criticized, as we all know, for your decision to stay out of the vietnam war, for your po

of time magazine and john heilemann of new york magazine. chuck todd of nbc news, from washington albert hunt, executive editor of bloomberg news joining us shortly gwen ifill of pbs and raddatz of nbc and john dickerson of, and slight magazine i am pleased to have each of them here this evening for this important debate and as always i begin with al hunt in washington. al. >> carlie, i think mitt romney went into this debate and the calculation was all he had to do was hold his own, he would win a draw and just show he could be commander in chief. in many ways it was very similar to the strategy barack obama had ironically in denver and in both cases i believe it misfired. almost from the beginning romney was on his heels and as the debate shaped up he ended up agreeing with barack obama's policies on just a stunning number of issues on bin laden, on drones, on pakistan, on getting out of afghanistan, in 2014, iranian sanctions, syria defending israel, even to some extent on libya. so i don't think this debate changes the dynamics a great deal, people aren't going to vote on foreign pol

, they could have tried to clear it by a lot, which i think candidate obama tried to do against john mccain four years ago, mitt romney chose to barely clear it. >> rose: how would they have done it better, chuck? >> oh, i think that it would have been a little clearer trying to understand, you know, how about the basics of when would a mitt romney, a romney administration use force? we really don't have the answer to that question. we still don't have the answer to that question. what is -- i thought it was for the first time, we did here because i asked romney this question about mubarek and by the way the number rec decision is one of the most quons consequential decisions this president made and it is going to be historically a consequential decision, especially if the united states president is ever faced with this in a saudi arabia, for instance, and for the first time when romney hugged him on that, i went, wow, because romney has come this close to saying i wouldn't have done that. he threw our allies under the bus, that has been a talking point of romney and, boy not only did he b

octubre y estas las noticias, frustran ataque terrorista en nueva york se detiene una john ven que pensaba detonar una bomba a cuadras de donde estaban las cuadras gem ras. >>> la mujer que se identifica como la hija de joaquÍn chapo guzmÁn al ser arrestada es hija del capo. >>> rebelan video de contratistas staujdz ceso en afganistÁn actuando bajo la influencia del alcohol. >>> y para cerrar un gol callejero comenzamos.

campaign. senator john edwards was picked by john kerry as his running mate that year. he faced off against dick cheney. they met at case western reserve university. this is about an hour 40 minutes. >> good evening from case western reserve university's veale center here in cleveland, ohio. i'm gwen ifill of "the newshour" and "washington week" on pbs, and i welcome you to the first and the only vice presidential debate between vice president dick cheney, the republican nominee, and senator john edwards, the democratic nominee. these debates are sponsored by the commission on presidential debates. tonight's will last 90 minutes, following detailed rules of engagement worked out by representatives of the candidates. i have agreed to enforce the rules they have devised for themselves to the best of my ability. the questions tonight will be divided between foreign and domestic policy, but the specific topics were chosen by me. the candidates have not been told what they are. the rules -- for each question, there can be only a two- minute response, a 90-second rebuttal and, at my discretion, a

to senior correspondent john oliver outside n.f.l. headquarters in new york. john, what is the status right now of the n.f.l. dispute? >> well! (cheers and applause) (cheers and applause) >> who families both alike in dignity, one the referee, the other the league of national football is locked in dispute ages old. oh fair referees! (laughter) shirts bestripes arms akimbo with only a flag and wheus toll examine desperation and fair n.f.l. battered but unbowed like henri at agincourt from this day to the ending of the world! (cheers and applause) but we shall be remembered. we few, we happy few, we band of brothers! (cheers and applause) >> jon: my god. my god. that's-- (cheers and applause) i'm just-- i'm sorry. it just-- holy (bleep)! i was just-- (laughter). john oliver, you have almost overnight improved exponentially. (laughter) john oliver, john oliver, you moved me. >> yes, 'tis i, john oliver in the flesh. (laughter) the clown prince of correspondents, bob your ankle, up your bum! (cheers and applause) >> jon: i have to say though, if i may, it certainly-- it certainly looks and soun

redesign and development upsdait. john thomas gave an update. this involves jefferson street from hyde to jones. the street is currently 37 feet wide and is one way with two traffic lanes westbound and parking on both sides of the street. the project will narrow the street to 24 feet wide with one traffic lane in each direction and no street parking. there will be no dedicated bike lanes, bicycles will use the street. this project was originally conceived as a shared public way where motor vehicles, pedestrians and bikes would all share the same surface, but has been revised based partly on the input from the blind focus group that mod had, revised so it will be a traditional raised sidewalk so the pedestrians are separated from cars. there will be a pedestrian accessible signal at jones and jefferson. the signals at jefferson and hyde are not signalized anyway and that will remain the same. there are ramps to some of the restaurants, mostly restaurants and stores, because of the change in level. in front of some of those buildings they will also install stairs to improve general

trying to take it is john delannie. >> reporter: john delannie, a wealthy entrepreneur, a democrat with the big house outside the district in potomac is trying to see bartlett. >> he is making things up, completely false stuff. >> reporter: they found mistreatment of seniors. bartlett, the republican is trying to turn his business background against him. >> these are not our words. >> i'm proud what my companies have done and all the jobs that we've created. >> reporter: bartlett has struggled with gasps. he said that federal student loans are against the constitution and suggested that is what led to the holocaust. >> if you ignore the constitution, and it will do something bad. >> reporter: and the democrats have tried to try bartlett toed to aiken. on the -- todd aiken on the issue of abortions in rape cases. >> all i had was is that we were fortunate that rapes were a small percentage of the pregnancies and therefore abortions. >> reporter: and he said now but he's voted historically that exception does not exist. >> we're pumping out of a spread. >> and joining me here in the

texans team. >> i don't think we need to hear much more. we will hear more from john harbaugh, coming up later in sports. >> coming up, an update on those events at a spot where three people were killed. tonight the alleged gunman is still on the loose. how the bomb squad has been joined on the investigation. >> live, local, late-breaking. you are watching wbal-tv 11 news at 6:00 p.m. with debra winger, your forecast with john collins, an 11 sports with pete gilbert. >> three people were shot and killed inside wisconsin spa and it is reported the suspected shooter is still on the run. in addition to the deaths, four people were hurt, none of them in critical condition. it all happened around 11:00 this morning at a baseball. the suspected shooter has been identified as radcliffe franklin hal andughton. a task force has released a sketch to help identify a suspect in the rash of shootings in the detroit area. multiple victims have reported a man firing shots while driving toward them. this is a sketch, based on one victim's description. so far no one has been injured. the incidents have o

justice john paul stevens discusses the second amendment and gun laws. later the supreme court and fisher v. the university of texas. a case challenging affirmative action policy in college admission. >>> our goal this week is to look at the philosophies of both president obama and governor romney when it comes to tech and communications issues. and to explore any possible policy changes that could result from a second obama administration or a first romney administration. joining us in our discussion is john kneuer. he used to be the administrator of telecommunications under the george w. bush administration and ed paisley is also with us a long time journalist. he's currently vice president for editorial for the center for american progresses action fund. and mr. paisley tbb we could start with you. how would you describe president obama's overall philosophy when it comes to tech and communications issues? >> guest: i would include tech communications in science. i think all three go together. i think it's -- one from the other or two from the other. the overall philosophy is trying to

romney wins and say that the first debate is important as was the first debate in 1960 when john kennedy close to the experience gap between himself richard nixon, who had been vice president for eight years now, he retreated himself as moderate massachusetts mitt and that enabled him to talk to women in suburban areas. as far as richard mourdock is concerned -- i will be blunt, i am a joe donnelly man in that race. i think richard mourdock would be a disaster. what he was stating was a consistent principle. if you believe that god creates every life, then the conditions under which that occurred, as tragic and is personally painful as they might be -- he is talking about the likely he was not defending rape -- >> she tried to make clear. >> which he did in artfully. >> i think the president has a good chance to take this county and this town, but governor romney has been running fairly strong campaign. >> that is the mayor of leesburg, in a loudoun county, virginia, a bellwether county. e for bara omaour years ago but then went republican a year later in the gubernatorial election. as o

the committee to help develop strategies. >> we aim to part of a johns hopkins university and develop stakeholders to get an idea of what is important to the city in terms of violence. >> citizens on patrol groups like this one in federal hill are doing their part to help. >> both want to get together and show unified front, that we do care about safety in this neighborhood. but citizens on patrol has been around for many years now. to find that you can get involved, contact the city police department. sheldon dutes, wbal-tv 11 news. >> tonight some leaders in the jewish community are pushing for voters to back question 6, the same sex marriage law. rabbi that other prominent figures talk about the importance of jewish ethics and moral values, which they say mandate that everyone be treated fairly under the law. but when two people choose to marry, whether they are gay or straight, they do so because they love each other. they share common values. they believe in a future that will be better if they commit to one another. >> they touched on the nation's commitment to religious freedom

have been up there, seeking advice from senator john cornyn, seeking advice from senator kay bailey hutchison, seeking advice from former senator phil gramm, all of whom have given me their insights on how to be effective, how to defend texas. >> is there something you want to learn more about or maybe you think your knowledge base is not where you want it to be? >> i'm drawing on their experience and show them -- i haven't served in the u.s. senate, neither has mr. sadler, i welcome and rely on their experience about the institution, about the individual people in that institution and my intention if and when i'm elected in november is to put my nose down, roll my sleeves up and do the hard work it's going to take to fix these problems. >> mr. sadler, how would you get up to speed and is there a policy area you think you would have to lean on your colleagues? >> foreign policy. we're not privy to the security briefings that senators get. we don't have those things. i've been very measured in my criticisms of -- i've never been critical of mr. obama or mr. romney on foreign policy b

alma mater--san jose state--this week. ">>>"dr. john carlos..wooo" the olympic legend will be forever remembered--not for what he did on the track, but for what he did on the medal stand. at the 1968 olympics in mexico city, john carlos--alongside tommy smith--raised their fists to protest human rights injustice. it became one of the most powerful images of the 1960's. the hall of fame sprinter says he and smith formulated exactly what they wanted to do. (john carlos/human rights activist) "we looked at what artifacts we had to bring to the table, such as the gloves, the beads, the scarf, the black shirt, to bring the puma shoe to the stand, to leave our shoes off our feet...we pretty much laid it out in terms of what we were going to do and how we were going to do it." all of these items...symbols of defying oppression. the famous black glove salute is immortalized by the statues at san jose state. and on wednesday, carlos himself was inspiring students. "these are the fights that we fight for." (lexy nuno/update news reporter): "hundreds of students gathered at the statues to hear j

propertily. josh tyrangiel is editor of bloomberg businessweek, john heilemann is national affairs editor for "new york" magazine. norah o'donnell is my cohost on cbs this morning, correspondent for cbs news, mike murphy a columnness for "time" magazine. from washington, albert hunt, executive editor of bloomberg news. from denver john dickerson, cbs news' political director and political correspondent at slate.com. and joining us also from denver katty kay of the bbc. i'm pleased to have all of them for this event we've all been waiting for. i go to al hubble. a simple question, who won, who lost, why. >> i don't know if that's simple but if i had to pick i would say governor romney won. he set the awe general de more than the president did. he affectively and aggressive attacked the president's record and did a pretty good job defending his own. ice going to have problems the next couple days on taxes however because he is proposing a $6 trillion tax cut and he hasn't said how he'll pay for it. but he still i thought did very well on most counts tonight. barack obama surprised me. i wou

cheney, the republican nominee, and senator john edwards, thek democratic nominee.r these debates are sponsored by the commission on presidential debatesment tonight's lasts 90 minutes following detailed rules of engagement rules they have devised for themselves to the best of my ability. the questions tonight will be divided between foreign and domestic policy, but the specific topics were chosen by me. the candidates have not been told what they are. the rules, for each question there can only be a two-minute response, and a 90-second rebuttal and at my discretion a discussion extension of one minute. a green light will come on when 30 seconds remain in any given answer, yellow at 15, red at five seconds and then flashing red means time is up. there's also a backup buzzer system if needed. the candidates may not direct questions to one another. there will be two min closing statements but no opening statements. there is an audience here in the hall, but they have been instructed to remain silent throughout. the order of the first question was determined by the candidates in adva

another and ray lewws will laadarius webb announccd that officially parbauuhhcoach john twookey pllyers.the ravens looe 3 3 - 3 3 3 3 &p3 3 3 p3 the avens ose two key plaayrs.coach john harbaughh -& lardarius webb and ray lewis this year. year.both guys were injured in pundays gamm agaanst the dalls cowboys.megan gilliland is live from m & t bank stadium with reaction. good morning guys,there is &ppunday's game here against th cowboys will be the final game of ray lewis' likely hall of famee areer.no word from lewis he will not play another game thii season... and neither will cornerbacc lardariusswebb. two key playyrs on the ravenn defense.webb tore an acl... while 37-year old lewiss suffeeed a complete tear of his tricep muscle in is right arm.with lewissout... dannnll ellerbe willlstep in. 3&we had to go through this before, i stepped in and we did a good job, buu you hate & he heart of the defense lardarius was coming on. on.fans are reacting to this news as well.on our facebook a. page... shebrah slowe- get bbtter, we still ave lot f peammvicki carter- i could we will

to october, everyone. this is "early start." i'm john berman in washington this morning. >> and i'm sir riesirita simon. >>> president barack obama and mitt romney square off wednesday night in denver. both trying to lower expectations practically gushing over one another, but new jersey governor chris christie is going against the grain and setting the bar high for the republican nominee. >>er time mitt romney has been confronted in this campaign with one of these moments, he has come through in a debate and performed extraordinarily well laying out his vision very clearly and also contrasting himself with his vision with hoomp his opponent was at that time. so i have absolute confidence when we get to thursday morning, george, you'll be shaking your head saying it's a brand new race with 33 dap days to go. >> you almost never hear that. doing well in a debate. what on earth was chris christie doing? live from washington in an undisclosed location at the bureau, peter what was chris christie doing there? >> i have no idea, john. do you? this flies in the face of everything the romney c

'll ask him about it. and we'll hear from conservative columnist john fund and michael gerson of the "washington post." analysis from our own norah o'donnell and john dickerson. then with the baseball post-accept under way and washington's team headed to the play-offs for the first time in 79 years, we'll talk baseball with the dodgers' legendary tony larussa, tony lasorda, manager of last year's world-champion st. louis cardinals. jane leavy, who literally wrote the book on mickey mantle. and peter gammons of the mlb network. it's batter up on "face the nation." captioning sponsored by cbs from cbs news in washington, "face the nation" with bob schieffer. >> schieffer: and good morning, again. welcome to peacethe nation. david axelrod, of course, is a senior campaign strategist, the senior campaign strategist for president obama. thank you for coming this morning. and we're joined by "cbs this morning" cohost norah o'donnell, and political director john dickerson. i'm just going to start, mr. axelrod, with the obvious question-- what happened? >> well, what happened was the p

's look forward. one thing that is very important about william rehnquist, he hired a man named john roberts who is the chief justice of the united states. he was hired to be a law clerk. john roberts then ended up serving in the ronald reagan administration and in the supreme court in 2005 succeed william rehnquist after he died from thyroid cancer. what is the legacy do you believe? >> guest: i see that john roberts as being rehnquist's natural air. >> now, roberts is a worn just partisan. his methodology is more conservative than william rehnquist, and there has never been it court is conservative, according to the academic studies, there has never been a court that is more conservative right now than the roberts court, at least not since 1987 when records are being analyzed and kept. i think that roberts is very much different in some respects. i'm not sure that rehnquist would've voted as roberts did. i'm not sure that he would voted as part of the affordable care act. >> i was betting against roberts, too. then what would have happened is that somebody else would have stepped u

? >> host: thank you so much. professor john lewis gaddis is joining us next to the history and biography tenth. welcome to booktv on c-span2. we have taken two calls already. i want to see if you have any response to these callers. the first caller asked about lester brown and his books. not sure if you are familiar with his books that he talked about the upcoming potential global wars such as a war over fresh water. >> guest: who can say? it seems to me in some ways we have always had these kinds of risks out there, risks of war over natural resources of one kind or another. many people think they are because population is increasing exponentially. if you look at population trends in many parts of the world the population has -- birth rates have begun to drop dramatically. i am not convinced this is automatic that there will be these kinds of wars. for that happened there would have to be these huge growths in population and it may be modern technology operating in other ways is contributing to a decline in that. one may offset the other. >> host: how much if any of the cold war was abo

. just ask john clemons, a flower farmer for more than 20 years now. you can step onto his farm in the town of jamul and think it looks similar to the other dozens of flower farms in s@n diego county. but look a little closer, and you'll discover a sweet surprise. >> in the mid-nineties, i was lookin' through a book, came across a recipe for crystallized violets, and i thought, hmm. egg whites, dip the flower in. throw it in sugar. roll it around. put it down. it dries, and you have something crunchy that's nonperishable. it's completely dried, and it's sugarcoated. i thought, "oh, my god. cold food side. they could use 'em on desserts. i've gotta figure out how to do this." >> imagine your favorite flowers turned int@ sugary tastes of heaven. that is exactly the idea that john set out to accomplish, to make a sweeter, better-tasting edible flower that he grew himself, the likes of which nobody had seen or heard of before, not even his girlfriend at the time, that is until their first date. >> i brought her a little tray of crystallized violas instead of the flowers, and we--whe

. >> four years later the "new york post" said john kerry had picked richard gephardt to be his running mate. this was of course a mistake. kerry had picked john edwards. john edwards turned out to be another kind of mistake, but that's another story. what the media reported even fooled gephardt's campaign manager. >> i called up dick gephardt, and i said, dick, i know you can't talk about this. he said, it never happened. i said, dick, i understand you have to deny it to me and everybody else. he said, steve, it didn't happen. >> why wouldn't you believe him when he said so-so emphatically, there was no meeting? >> you absolutely must keep the conversation going on with the nominee and -- >> lying is okay in politics, running for office? >> lying is not okay unless you're asked an inappropriate question. >> politicians have always lied. >> i'm not a crook. >> i did not have sexual relations with that woman. >> the media used to give candidates privacy. even keep their secrets. they rarely pictured fdr in his wheelchair. they kept jfk's sexual activities secret. but now everything's game. th

that -- >> your most embarrassing moment. >> walking in on george bush when he was having a massage. >> john, that was a bad thing to bring up. >> bill, why don't you shut up for a minute? >> what do you think? >> it's not racist. it's just stupid. >> and all that matters. >> the last few days these independent women, suburban women voters end up tipping the scales. >> on "cbs this morning." >> which is why instead of e-mails, obama is just sending late night texts that say, you e-mails, obama is just sending late night texts that say, you up? captioning funded by cbs bs >>> welcome to "cbs this morning." forecasters have found a new word to describe the potential impact of hurricane sandy on the east coast. they're calling it frankenstorm. >> sandy is pounding the bahamas this morning. by next week it could bring hurricane force winds, strong rain, record-high tides and heavy snow to the northeastern u.s. david bernard, chief meteorologist for our nbc affiliate, channel 4, brings us the latest. >> a category 1 hurricane in the bahamas. it is a little bit weaker than it was this time yesterd

and d say that the first debate was as important as the first debate in 1960, when john f. kennedy close to the experience gapap between himself and richard nixon, who had been vice president for eight years he recreated himself as moderate massachusetts mitt and that enabled him to talk to women and suburban areas. as far as richard mourdock is concerned, i will be blunt, i joe donnelly man in that race. what he was getting was a consistent principle -- you believe that god life, that the conditions s under which the creation occurred, as tragic and personally painful as it might be -- he was talking about th life e to he was not defending the method -- >> which he ied to make clear. [ mitt romney ] we have to work on a collaborative basis. look, the reason i'm in this race is there are people thatre really hurting today in this country. and we face this deficit -- could crush the future generations.mocrats both love america but we need to have leadership -- leadership in washington that will actually bring people together and get the job done and could not care less if

in this book. >> john wrote for the new yorker. we talked about the dulles brothers. head of the state and head of the cia. i wrote a book about the cia. he asked if i wanted to the dulles brothers as a biography. i was interested. the conversation drifted off to eisenhower, the boss of dulles brothers. he said the general who had been ik's staff secretary but really his chief national security adviser, had said to him, the thing about eisenhower is he would never tell anybody whether he was going to use nuclear weapons. why is this important? weapons1950's, nuclear- were pretty new and we threaten ted to use them. no one ever knew if eisenhower was serious or not. to be credible as a deterrent, you have to be chronicled -- credible. ike never told anybody. talk about loneliness of command. the use of nuclear weapons. what could be a greater command decision than that. he was a guy who brought the allied invasion in world war ii. now he is president and he has an even greater level of responsibility. at a time when nuclear weapons are new. not just one or two, but a whole arsenal. h-bombs. are

this this corruption based on corruption based on corruption. >>that's an understatement, eliot. [ ♪ music ♪ ] >> john: welcome back to current tv's coverage of the 2012 presidential debate. tonight is the final televised debate between the two candidates. i'm here with vice president al gore, governor granholm governor eliot spitzer and cenk uygur. there is increaseing speakalation that the president could win the electoral college vote, i call this, if you forgive me, mr. vice president a karma sandwich. is that a possibility if your world of giants maps and figures. >> however he gets there it will be to the consternation of republicans. as we look at this map these are the swing states that we're looking at now. this is a likelihood that the president could win the electoral college and still lose a state like florida. we're going to give that to romney. we're going to be very genius generous to romney. he could win new hampshire and i don't think that will happen. let's give him colorado, nevada, we'll give that to romney. he's at 2 67. you look at this right here, the prothetheproduceer of "the

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